How free is "free"? Dedicated hosting provider Uplinkearth acquired by Hostopia
| Posted by Hungry Lion at 4 May 2008 17:36 | |
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I always stay a few steps ahead of rising expectations. I used to focus on the important domain names web hosting. In this field, it is hard to find a good explanation today that doesn't claim to be a best answer. But this post I am going to share is very good one which contains all information you might looking for.
Long story short, let's see this one.
Hostopia, a leading web services provider for small to medium businesses declared that Luxomovera, Uplinkearth operator, agreed to sell its customer assets. According to the agreement, Uplinkearth's 12,500 business customers will be transferred to Hostopia. Hostopia announces that it will provide these customers under Uplinkearth brand. The company decides to provide managed dedicated services under the name Uplinkearth. The migration to Hostopia's unified operating platform plans to be ..[More].
Aside from this, all things I known have been centered together and given a new picture. I believe that is fabulous, you should read it:
Scottsdale, Arizona - (The Hosting News) - April 29, 2008 - Web hosting domain registrar, Go Daddy, has instituted a special designated day to honor Webmasters, by declaring April 29th as Webmasters' Day. Most companies now consider the web site a key aspect of the business plan and bottom line success. According to IDC, two-thirds of small to medium sized business have the webmaster in-house. Webmasters are typically responsible for the content and stability of web sites. Having a good ..Read the rest of this post.
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Posted April 27th, 2008 by Laura Scott Is the future really free? It seems we've entered an age where there's a land-grab happening for personal data and attention time. Look at all the web start-ups backed by venture capital. They aren't investing out of philanthropy. There's value there. YouTube is "free" but Google paid over a billion dollars for it. Why? Here's a hint: It's not about the Tube. Chris Anderson's Wired article was quite bold in its ..ยป.
Mind you, I wouldn't expect something more than this.
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